manjeroke писав: ↑22 листопада 2021, 14:25
сть страна явно знающая как контролировать вирус и доказавшая это несколько раз за 2 года.
Итога падведьом (vito mode on):
- Starting 19 March 2020, foreign nationals were barred from entering Taiwan
- Taiwanese citizens are advised to avoid all nonessential travel
- All who are admitted into the country must complete quarantine upon arrival
- disinfection of public spaces around schools, and providing briefings with Chen Shih-chung, the Minister of Health and Welfare
- the export of digital thermometers was banned.
- ban on the export of face masks
- People with odd-numbered identity documents were permitted to buy masks on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays; those with even-numbered identity documents were to buy masks on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays; anyone is allowed to buy masks on Sundays. Adults were allowed to buy two masks each visit and children four, with the restriction that a minimum of seven days must elapse since the last purchase.
- In mid-May 2021, after a consistent rise in cases over a two week period, the Taiwanese government ordered all civilians must wear a mask when in any public space, including outdoors. Anyone found out of compliance with the mask policy would be subject to a fine of 3,000 to 15,000 NTD. In the third week of May, the government tightened requirements and announced masks must also be worn inside automobiles whenever there were two or more occupants inside the vehicle; however, individuals driving alone were not required to wear a mask
- all passengers on trains and intercity buses were required to wear masks, as were people at highway rest stops.
- passengers who refuse to wear masks after being asked to do so would be assessed a fine of NT$3,000 to NT$15,000, as stipulated by the Communicable Disease Control Act
- Taiwan banned frontline medical professionals working in hospitals from traveling to areas placed under a Level 3 travel alert
An outbreak among Taiwanese state owned China Airlines crew members in late April 2021 led to a sharp surge in cases, mainly in the Greater Taipei area, from mid May. In response, the closure of all schools in the area from kindergarten to high schools was mandated for two weeks, and national borders were closed for at least a month to those without a residence permit, among other measures.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasted Taiwan's 2020 annual gross domestic product (GDP) with a decline of 4%
Economic stimulus vouchers with a range of monetary values were made available in mid-July to Taiwanese citizens and foreign residents with a Taiwanese spouse. Vouchers were available via purchase and via special lotteries. They are targeted at specific industries, such as agriculture and tourism, and are set to expire on 31 December to help boost the sectors most affected by the pandemic.
As global cases emerge, air demands for traveling have been decreasing, leaving the country's largest airport, Taoyuan International Airport, with just 669 passengers arriving or departing without any passenger in Terminal 1 at the lowest point.This led to a reconsideration of reducing the number of boarding gates to 18. On 13 May, EVA Air reported a net loss of NT$1.2 billion because of low demand caused by the pandemic.
